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Demonstrators set up roadblocks in volatile region
Published: Dec 11, 2022 10:00 PM Updated: Dec 11, 2022 09:57 PM
Kosovo Serbs block the road near the village of Rudine, North Mitrovica, Kosovo, Serbia on December 10, 2022. Photo: IC

Kosovo Serbs block the road near the village of Rudine, North Mitrovica, Kosovo, Serbia on December 10, 2022. Photo: IC


Hundreds of ethnic Serbs erected barricades on a road in northern Kosovo region on Saturday, blocking the traffic over the two major border crossings towards Serbia, police said.

Hundreds of ethnic Serbs erected barricades on a road in northern Kosovo region on Saturday, blocking the traffic over the two major border crossings towards Serbia, police said.

Trucks, ambulance cars and agricultural machines were used as roadblocks, fueling recent tensions which included explosions, shootings and an armed attack on a police patrol which saw one ethnic Albanian police officer wounded.

Demonstrators told AFP they were outraged over the arrest of a former ethnic Serb policeman, who is suspected of being involved in recent attacks on Kosovo police officers.

The protest was announced by setting off emergency sirens in several cities in Serb-majority northern Kosovo, according to an AFP journalist.

Local media reported that the protesters wanted to prevent the arrested officer from being transferred to the capital Pristina.

Kosovo's authority said the ex-policeman was one of two suspects arrested over attacks on police officers in the past couple of days.

On Saturday, President Aleksandar Vucic said that Serbia will ask NATO peacekeepers to let it deploy Serbian military and police in Kosovo.

Although it believes there is no chance of the request being approved, Vucic told a news conference in Belgrade that he would make the request in a letter to the commander of the NATO force KFOR.

"We will request from the KFOR commander to ensure the deployment of army and police personnel of the Republic of Serbia to the territory of Kosovo and Metohija," Vucic told a news conference in Belgrade.

He said he had "no illusions" that the request would be accepted.

The government in Belgrade would formally adopt the document on Monday or Tuesday, he said.

The resolution says Serbia can deploy up to 1,000 military, police and customs officials to Orthodox Christian religious sites, areas with Serb majorities and border crossings, if such a deployment is approved by KFOR's commander.

The recent bout of tensions flared up after Kosovo scheduled local elections in the Serb-majority municipalities for December 18 which the main Serb political party said it would boycott.

Explosions and shooting were heard on Tuesday as election authorities visited two municipalities in north Kosovo in order to prepare the vote, but no injuries were reported.

An officer was wounded in northern part of Kosovo on Thursday after ethnic Albanian police were deployed to the volatile region.

Kosovo's government said the police - mainly ethnic Albanians - were deployed after local Serbs collectively resigned from official posts in protest over Kosovo's decision to replace Belgrade-issued car licence plates with ones from Pristina.

Ethnic Serbs also staged daily protests and blocked the traffic at Kosovo's two northern border crossings with Serbia in September 2021, protesting the licence plate issue.

Kosovo and Serbia traded blame for the latest round of incidents.

The underlying source of tension is Kosovo's 2008 declaration of independence, which Serbia does not recognize.

Serbia encourages the Serb minority to remain loyal to Belgrade.

Serbs make up around 120,000 of Kosovo's roughly 1.8 million-strong population, which is overwhelmingly ethnic Albanian.

Agencies